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DBC Digital | Plumb Marketing Services
  • Expertise
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    • Print and Mailing Services
      • Marketing Express Program
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Archive for BLOGGING – Page 2

Marketing Strategies, re-posting blogs
Posted by DBC Digital on
 January 15, 2015

Marketing Strategies – Six Simple Tips to Leverage Your Old Blog Posts

Brands and business leaders spend a great deal of time and energy developing and promoting new blog posts. Although this is an essential activity and an important use of resources, creating new posts can also take up a substantial part of your limited time and keep you from posting anything at all.

When leveraged properly, re-promoting some of your previous blog posts can bring in new traffic, engage consumers and help your audience grow. As marketing strategies go, this rates as “easy but effective”. Here are some tips and strategies you can use to pull these posts off the shelf and put them back to work for your brand.

1. Choose your best posts.

Promoting posts that flopped the first time will get you nowhere. Although these posts may continue to draw in a small amount of traffic,  focus your attention on those blogs that were most popular with readers in the past.

2. Make sure the content is still relevant.

Your post from last Valentine’s Day may have drawn in record numbers of readers at the time, but promoting it at Christmas may not be the best plan. Before you begin promoting any older post, make sure that its content is still relevant and useful for your audience.

3. Use social media.

One of the easiest ways to direct readers’ attention to your previous posts is to share these posts on various social media websites, including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and any other channels your brand utilizes. Each time you share a post, be sure to entice readers with a teaser or short explanation of why the post is relevant.

4. Include internal links in new posts.

Another excellent way to direct readers to your older blog posts is to link back to them from within your newer entries. When using this strategy, it’s important to link only to older entries that are relevant to your current post. Likewise, don’t include too many backlinks , as this can overwhelm your readers.

5. Don’t re-date old posts.

Linking back to previous posts is fine, but pretending they are new posts isn’t a good idea. Even if you change the date on the posts, at least some of your readers are sure to recognize that they have seen the content before. This makes your brand appear dishonest, which can drive your readers away.

6. Don’t go overboard.

Although referring readers to old posts can be a useful strategy for your brand, it can be overdone. If you share or link back to older posts too frequently, your readers may think that your brand is out of new ideas or has become lazy. Instead, spread your links to older posts throughout your newer content.

As you put these ideas into practice, pay careful attention to the results. Evaluate the number of views your older entries are receiving before and after you promote them in order to measure the success of your efforts. This will help you determine which promotion methods are most effective, as well as which old posts are most likely to draw new readers.

For more about blogging and other Marketing Strategies – subscribe to our blog today!

 

Categories : BLOGGING, BRANDING, Content Creation, SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING, STRATEGY
Posted by DBC Digital on
 January 13, 2015

CONTENT MARKETING TIPS FOR EMERGING BRANDS

When your brand or company is new or growing, the idea of developing  and implementing a marketing strategy can be overwhelming.  But marketing is an essential part of growing your business.  So below are some tips on helping you make the most of your time and getting the best results from your marketing efforts.

As you  build your strategy, you may hear a number of terms you’re not familiar with and it may seem like you will never be able to make sense of so much complex information. But fear not. One of the most important terms you will hear as you go about promoting your brand is “content marketing.” Because this type of marketing is so effective, it is one of the first strategies you should master.

What exactly is Content Marketing?

Content marketing is a strategy that involves the creation and distribution of useful content to your customers and prospects on a regular basis. This type of marketing is not intended to promote your company’s products and services directly, but rather to build a strong relationship between your brand and each individual customer. As customers come to rely on your for information and/or advice, they are more likely to come back and make purchases from your brand as well.

Content Marketing Tips

Below are some tips designed to help you get started with content marketing.

1. Define your audience.

The first step in creating a viable content marketing strategy is to determine the audience your content should target. For example, if your brand sells software products for accounting professionals, your target audience may be independent accountants and CPA’s between the ages of 25 and 55 who either lead an accounting team or run their own business. After defining your audience, you should write each article, blog post or social media update as though you are directly talking to the members of this group.

2. Be consistent across all channels.

If you are utilizing multiple channels to distribute your content to your customers and prospects, make sure that the content posted on all channels is consistent. Content should not necessarily be repeated word for word, but you should draft posts that complement one another.

3. Don’t overdo it.

When it comes to content marketing, more is not always better. Although it is important to post content on a regular basis, you don’t want to bombard your readers with too many posts at one time. Make sure you post new content at least several times each week, but avoid releasing new posts more than once in the same day.

4. Create valuable content.

Make sure that all of the content you post provides your audience with something of value, whether it be information, advice or tips. If your content is not valuable, users will not return to read more of it in the future and they may even unsubscribe from your email list or social media profiles.

5. Regularly evaluate and revise your strategy.

Don’t expect your content marketing campaigns to be perfect on the first try. Some trial and error is required before you find what resonates with your readers.  To identify areas in need of improvement, evaluate the results of your content marketing efforts on a regular basis using quantifiable data, such as website traffic to your posts or open rates on your emails, etc.  Determine the success of each of your efforts and make changes to your future campaigns accordingly.

The bottom line is that providing fresh content  for your clients and prospects on a regulator basis is an important part of your overall marketing success and will pay significant dividends.  Use these tips to help you get it right.

Categories : BLOGGING, BRANDING, Content Creation, INTERNET MARKETING, SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING, STRATEGY
Posted by DBC Digital on
 January 8, 2015

Marketing with blogs – Blogging Doesn’t Work (or Does it?)

In the beginning, there was the simple “web log.”   The web log eventually evolved into one of the earliest and most effective tools of the modern internet: the blog.

Blogging soon became a “thing” for web-savvy users who wanted to share a piece of their lives, their knowledge, or their interests with the rest of the world. Before long, advertisers saw the potential in blogging as well. Eventually, brands followed suit.

Now, while blogging is still considered by expert marketers and marketing strategists to be one of the best marketing approaches available,  its proper implementation is awash in misconception, the deadliest of which is in fact just two sides of the same coin: people either say it absolutely works, or it definitely doesn’t.

The False Dichotomy of Blogging

Why can there be no middle ground? Isn’t it possible that blogging will work for your business, but, for instance, only on weekends?

This false argument leads business owners to make rash, expensive decisions (when assured that blogging will most definitely work) or an irrational fear of throwing their money down a hole (when told that it won’t).

“It Works Like Magic”

When someone tells you blogs work like magic, you should run. This person either doesn’t know what they’re talking about, are prone to hyperbole, or worse, they don’t understand how blogs work in marketing.

Almost nothing in online marketing “works like magic.” That’s the beauty of it: everything is measured, tracked, and monitored, so you can actually adapt, adjust or continue forward with concrete ROI information.

The same can be said for blogging. You can’t expect to start a blog and suddenly increase your bottom-line. Blogs, however, do affect your bottom-line in these fundamental ways:

  • Blogs increase your visibility through fresh, optimized, and high-quality content
  • Blogs improve user engagement which improves the chances of purchase or retention
  • Blogs target specific users who are more likely to convert into leads
  • Blogs help increase your brand’s authority in your niche

Notice that while fundamental, these points are nuanced: blogs do increase visibility, but you need fresh, optimized, and high-quality content. Blogs do target specific users and increase engagement, but you need to know how.

It’s the same with the flip side of the argument:

“It Doesn’t Work”

Every business and brand is scurrying to become its own publisher these days because providing quality content works. The web runs on content, and blogs are just one of many channels to create the much-needed content that readers crave.

This “blogging doesn’t work” line is easily proven false by replacing the word “blog” with just about anything else that has been proven to work:

  • Online marketing doesn’t work
  • Medicine doesn’t work
  • Advertising doesn’t work

See the pattern here?

Whoever said medicine doesn’t work either took the wrong medicine or didn’t take enough of it. The same goes for blogs.

The essential ingredient is Strategy.

If you want to deploy a business blog for your brand, you need a strategy. It’s like when you need prescribed medicine, you need an expert diagnosis and a prescription before you start your routine.

Content marketing — the larger category that blogging falls into — requires a strategy in order to work to its fullest potential. The simplest steps towards a working content strategy can be simplified into the following steps:

  • Figure out the business goals your want to attain through content creation (blogs being one channel of content)
  • Align your objectives to your sales funnel
  • Align your sales funnel to the buyer profiles (“personas”) of your target customers
  • Develop a content road map to dictate quality, consistency, and a posting schedule
  • Implement, measure performance, tweak and re-measure

There is, admittedly,  one justifiable reason to say “blogging doesn’t work” – and that is if you aren’t able to do any of the above. This is where expert support from content strategists and marketers becomes important.   Each of the steps above needs to be developed and can encompass everything from business development to copy writing.

It all boils down to one important truth: blogs aren’t guaranteed cash cows — but cows aren’t guaranteed cash cows either. You need to feed them, support them, and otherwise take care of them. You need to know what you’re doing to get something out of them. And that’s just common sense.

Don’t fall in to the trap of misconceptions about blogging, or you might just miss out on one of the most effective methods of your entire marketing and branding effort.

 

Categories : BLOGGING, BRANDING, INTERNET MARKETING, STRATEGY
Posted by DBC Digital on
 July 24, 2014

Does My Business Need a Mobile App?

Any business that has a foothold in digital marketing is probably familiar with mobile commerce apps. It’s very possible your own competitors have their own mobile apps that are utilized in different ways. As more and more people use smartphones and tablets on a regular basis, companies can use mobile apps for a variety of purposes.

For example, some mobile apps might be designed to sell items, while others are constructed to build a better user experience. Most businesses could benefit from having a mobile app in some form, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you should go out and fund your company’s mobile app development. There are pros and cons to an app, and it largely depends on your company’s current circumstances. Here’s a quick overview of mobile apps for the small business.

The Decline of Mobile Browsers

If your company targets mobile consumers heavily, mobile device usage trends are very important. As far as accessing the Web goes, mobile browsers are in heavy decline. The main reason for this is because consumers often frequent the same online websites, and instead of accessing the mobile Web page, a mobile app is more convenient–and user-friendly.

If you have a large base of repeat consumers, a mobile app can be much more reliable in attracting their business than if you make them go through a mobile browser. Keep in mind that the mobile app is also more visible on their devices, giving you a little free brand promotion each time they open up their smartphone or tablet.

And that’s just one of several benefits mobile apps offer.

Why Mobile Apps are Good for Businesses

The main reason businesses consider apps–at least from a functionality standpoint–is that apps are fully customizable. In a web browser, you are restricted by the browser’s functionality, which can reduce your overall features and inhibit its user-friendliness. When you build an app, you can build the entire platform from the ground up, which is critical if you want to give users a unique experience.

Mobile apps can also integrate with other apps, including social media. If you’re looking to build brand visibility through a mobile app, allowing users to tweet or post to Facebook about their app experience can build that reputation while attracting new users.

Alternatively, businesses may choose to drive commerce through their apps. Having a dedicated app for e-retail purposes helps simplify the shopping process by keeping users logged in, securely storing their user preferences and payment info, and streamlining the shopping process. No matter what your goals, an app will most likely offer a better experience for both the business and its consumers.

Weighing the Costs of App Development

If mobile apps offer so many opportunities to businesses, why isn’t a dedicated business app a no-brainer? Almost always, the primary deterrent is cost. Depending on your interests, mobile app development is a costly affair. A single app may cost $10,000 or more. While some cheaper app development options may exist, these are usually a high-risk move since the quality and functionality will be bargain-rate, essentially dissolving much of the app’s benefit in the first place.

The exact cost can depend on how you want to utilize your app, but unless your mobile app is essential to your company’s success, it’s usually better to wait until you have an established consumer base and the ability to drive mass downloads quickly. Otherwise, you’re building a product hoping consumers will come–and that’s never a guarantee.

A mobile app is a great asset for any business, but it needs to be implemented only when you have a good financial outlook. If you’re ready to adopt a mobile app or any other part of your digital strategy, contact DBC Digital today.

Categories : BLOGGING
Posted by DBC Digital on
 July 15, 2014

Social Media Best Practices

As social media outlets have multiplied and diversified, the best practices governing social media marketing have changed. There’s no longer a once-size-fits-all approach that can be applied across half a dozen networks for the same results. That means social media marketing has become more specialized–and more complex.

But that doesn’t mean successful social marketing is out-of-reach for the common small business. It only takes an understanding of the characteristics of each network, and the research that’s piling up on each, to understand how each network can be uniquely used to advance a company’s goals. Here are some great takeaway from a recent Digital Insights infographic that offer an excellent template for custom-fitting your social strategy.

The Facebook Rule: Less is More

If you’re swamping your Facebook followers with frequent status updates, you could be doing more bad than good. It turns out Facebook is where consumers are most irritable. They can become annoyed or disinterested in brands quickly, and that leads to high rates of “Unliking” a business page.

The solution is simple: Keep your Facebook posts to one to three updates per day. Limit yourself only to your most interesting and useful content. If it’s a slow day, it’s better to post nothing at all than to risk alienating followers. More than any other social network, Facebook is where quality trumps quantity.

For Mobile Targeting, Turn to Twitter

Is your business looking to score among mobile device users? Twitter is the place to go. Almost 80 percent of Twitter users are active on their mobile devices. This means that video producers, app developers, e-retail and other mobile-focused businesses have plenty to gain from building a presence on Twitter.

Because the lifespan of a tweet is so much shorter than a Facebook post, it’s critical that companies stay on top of updating their Twitter throughout the day–quantity is needed here to make sure your content reaches enough people. Be frequent in your posting and be mindful of the unique mobile opportunities Twitter may offer.

The Youth Movement Has Gone to Instagram

Instagram is a newer social network, but it’s very influential among young demographics. More than 200 million accounts are currently active on Instagram, which is the most popular social network among 23 percent of youth. While Pinterest, another visual-based social network, features a user base that is predominantly female, Instagram is a great option for targeting young consumers and connecting with them through photo-based content.

Seeking Sales? Update Your Blog

It isn’t always thought of in the vein of other social networks, but blogging is a genuinely social activity. Many bloggers host their blogs on connected networks of thousands, even millions of other blogs, resulting in an active community. But more important than the community is the power of influence blogging offers: Company websites that have an active blog enjoy a 97 percent increase in the number of inbound links coming to their sites, and marketers utilizing a blog have seen a 67 percent increase in sales referrals from their blogs.

Additionally, the body of content creators on blogs is relatively small–only about 6.7 million bloggers used dedicated blog networks to produce their content. That means the competition is much lower than on social networks, where content creation is easy and cheap. If you’re looking for a way to establish your credibility and authority in your field, a blog is an easy, low-cost way to separate yourself from the pack.

Don’t let your competition pass you by when it comes to social media and other digital marketing. Contact DBC Digital today to bring your online strategy up-to-speed.

Categories : BLOGGING
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